Outsider Art: Visionary Worlds and Trauma
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Daniel Wojcik's interdisciplinary study challenges prevailing assumptions about the idiosyncratic status of outsider artists. This wide-ranging investigation of the art and lives of those labeled outsiders focuses on the ways that personal tragedies and suffering have inspired the art-making process. In some cases, trauma has triggered a creative transformation that has helped artists confront otherwise overwhelming life events. Additionally, Wojcik's study illustrates how vernacular traditions, religious worldviews, ethnic heritage, and popular culture have influenced such art. With its detailed consideration of personal motivations, cultural milieu, and the potentially therapeutic aspects of art making, this volume provides a deeper understanding of the artistic impulse and human creativity.
Daniel Wojcik
Daniel Wojcik is professor of English and folklore studies at the University of Oregon. He is author of Outsider Art: Visionary Worlds and Trauma and Punk and Neo-Tribal Body Art, both published by University Press of Mississippi, and The End of the World as We Know It: Faith, Fatalism, and Apocalypse in America.
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Outsider Art - Daniel Wojcik
Praise for Outsider Art: Visionary Worlds and Trauma
Lavishly illustrated, many of the images never before seen by the public, this indispensable volume is steeped in details about the lives of outsider and visionary artists. Authoritative, informative, and accessible, this groundbreaking volume is a work of art itself as well as a monumental achievement in scholarship, one that forces us to rethink conventional notions of art and creativity.
—Michael Owen Jones, professor emeritus, Department of World Arts and Cultures, University of California, Los Angeles
By exploring personal histories and traumatic experiences of creative people sometimes living at the fringe of society, Daniel Wojcik brings new insights into the phenomenon of outsider art. This comprehensive study will influence how outsider art is now seen and evaluated; it blurs the boundaries between insiders and outsiders and contributes to our understanding of art today. Engagingly written and wonderfully illustrated—in full color!—this is an essential resource that takes the reader on a mesmerizing and inspiring journey. Where are my paint brushes . . .
—Peter Jan Margry, professor of European ethnology, University of Amsterdam
"Wojcik’s new book seems destined to become an essential text for understanding the field today. Outsider Art: Visionary Worlds and Trauma now brings a great deal of clarity and understanding not only to one of the major hotbeds of activity in the international art market, but to the creative act itself. It is a must-read for anyone serious about better understanding this fascinating subject."
—Roger Manley, Director of the Gregg Museum of Art & Design at North Carolina State University and curator of exhibitions of self-taught art at more than forty other institutions, including the American Visionary Art Museum
Wojcik’s informed writing—demonstrated by an almost encyclopedic knowledge of self-taught and outsider art and history—his original research, his balanced and nuanced thinking, the representative examples he discusses, and his ability to articulate his findings make this book required reading for anyone interested in outsider, self-taught, or contemporary folk art.
—Carol Crown, professor emerita, University of Memphis, and coeditor of Sacred and Profane: Voice and Vision in Southern Self-Taught Art
OUTSIDER ART
Visionary Worlds and Trauma
Daniel Wojcik
www.upress.state.ms.us
The University Press of Mississippi is a member of the Association of American University Presses.
Cover image: Eugene Von Bruenchenhein, Untitled (no. 931), 1962. Oil on paperboard, 17 ½ x 28 ½ in. (44.4 x 72.4 cm). © 2009 Rich Shapero. Used with permission. www.vonbruenchenhein.com
Copyright © 2016 by University Press of Mississippi
All rights reserved
Printed by Regent Publishing Services in China
First printing 2016
∞
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Wojcik, Daniel, author.
Title: Outsider art : visionary worlds and trauma / Daniel Wojcik.
Description: Jackson : University Press of Mississippi, 2016. | Includes
bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2015045299 (print) | LCCN 2015045969 (ebook) | ISBN
9781496808066 (cloth : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781496808073 (Epub Single) |
ISBN 9781496808080 (Epub Inst.)
Subjects: LCSH: Outsider art. | Art brut. | Outsider artists-—Psychology.
Classification: LCC N7432.5.A78 W65 2016 (print) | LCC N7432.5.A78 (ebook) |
DDC 709.04/09—dc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015045299
British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data available
To the memory of my mother, Beatrice Ann Caponecchia (1930–2009)
And to Michael Owen Jones, mentor and pioneer in the study of vernacular artistic expression
Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Inside the Art of Outsiders
On Formalism, Biography, and Cultural Milieu
Chapter 2
Between Madness and Art
Insanity, Therapy, and the Origins of Outsider Art
Chapter 3
Visionary Art Realms
Spiritual Experiences and Vernacular Traditions
Chapter 4
Vernacular Environments
Recycling and the Art of Transformation
Chapter 5
Trauma, Suffering, and Art Making
Epilogue: The End of Outsider Art?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Researching and writing this book has been a lengthy process, and I have many people to thank for their suggestions and support. The phenomenon of self-taught and outsider art has intrigued me for decades and although I have taught courses, visited exhibits and major venues internationally, and presented academic papers on the subject over the years, my ideas for this volume came together at the conference Taking the Road Less Traveled: Built Environments of Vernacular Artists,
hosted by the John Michael Kohler Arts Center in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, in September, 2007. The presentations at that conference, and discussions with those in attendance, particularly Erika Doss, Jo Farb Hernández, Sarah Lombardi, Valérie Rousseau, Charles Russell, Peter Tokofsky, and Daniel Franklin Ward were instrumental in helping me formulate my thoughts about self-taught artists and vernacular artistic expression for this book. I also thank Leslie Umberger and Terri Yoho for providing a wealth of information and access to the collections of the John Michael Kohler Arts Center and the Kohler Foundation during the conference and again during my other visits.
I am especially grateful to my former teachers at UCLA who encouraged this project from the start: Robert A. Georges, who expanded my understanding of expressive behavior, and Michael Owen Jones, who taught me how to study art making and provided valuable advice throughout my research. I also thank the following individuals who offered their help and insights during various stages of this project: Aarne Anton, Jim Arient, Thomas Atkins, Daniel Baumann, Eric Bebernitz, Doug Blandy, Henry Boxer, Shari Cavin, William A. Christian Jr., Donald Cosentino, Bruno Decharme, Ted Degener, Luisa Del Giudice, Carl Diehl, Craig Flanery, John Gage, Kristen Galleneaux Brooks, Nathan Georgitis, Henry Glassie, Marion Harris, Rebecca Hoffberger, Karen Hydendahl, John Maizels, Roger Manley, Jay Mechling, Randall Morris, Bob Moyers, Eliza Murphy, Tom Patterson, Leonard Norman Primiano, Kate Ristau, Stephen Romano, Thomas Röske, Rosalynn Rothstein, Jack Santino, Joseph Sciorra, Fred Scruton, Sharon Sherman, Frans Smolders, John F. Turner, Nico van der Endt, and Julie and Bruce Lee Webb. My sincere thanks as well to Carol Crown, Robert Dobler, David Ensminger, Robert Glenn Howard, Peter Jan Margry, Peter Tokofsky, and Ann Wiens for offering critical feedback on portions of this manuscript. I am indebted to Katie Keene, Todd Lape, Robert Jefferson Norrell, Anne Stascavage, Shane Gong Stewart, and the supportive staff at the University Press of Mississippi for their help with the publication process, and especially to Craig Gill for his encouragement, editorial advice, and good humor. Thanks as well to the students in my classes and the friends and colleagues who expressed interest in this project. I owe a special debt of gratitude to the Visionary Art Museum of Los Angeles, a project of Community Partners, which came to the rescue with unexpected support that enabled the inclusion of many of the color plates featured in this book. I also would like to acknowledge the late Seymour Rosen, photographer and art environment enthusiast, whose tireless efforts to document and preserve vernacular environments through his nonprofit organization SPACES helped to validate and inspire my early interest in the creativity of self-taught artists.
This project was completed with support provided by the Oregon Humanities Center, the Office of Research and Faculty Development, and the Department of English at the University of Oregon. I would like to express my appreciation as well to the artists, authors, institutions, and numerous individuals who have granted permission for the use of illustrations, photographs, and quoted material. Special thanks to Ted Degener, who generously shared his extensive photographic documentation of self-taught and folk artists.
This book could not have been written without the support of my family: my son, Konrad; my wife, Viasha; and my brother, James. Finally, I thank my parents, Beatrice and Gerald, who took me to dinosaur parks, underground gardens, bottle villages, wigwam motels, mosaic glass towers, and other entrancing attractions, introducing me at an early age to the wonders of vernacular artistic expression.
Outsider Art
Chapter 1
Inside the Art
of Outsiders
On Formalism, Biography,
and Cultural Milieu
During the past three decades, the phenomenon of outsider art has moved from the margins of cultural awareness toward the mainstream of the contemporary art world, captivating an international community of collectors, curators, dealers, scholars, and artists, as well as the general public. Often characterized as raw art
that is created spontaneously and for entirely personal reasons, outsider art historically has been associated with individuals who have no formal artistic training and exist outside of the dominant art world—psychiatric patients, visionaries and trance mediums, self-taught individualists, recluses, folk eccentrics, social misfits, and assorted others who are isolated or outcast from normative society, by choice or by circumstance.
The allure of outsider art has spawned an industry of galleries, publications, museum exhibits, art fairs, and auctions. The community of outsider-art aficionados itself has been the subject of ethnographic study and journalistic exposé.¹ A canon of classic outsiders and visionaries has been established, and grants, commissions, and international awards routinely recognize and reward outsider artists. Their work has penetrated popular culture, adorning postage stamps and rock-and-roll album covers, and outsider artists have been depicted in musical scores and off-Broadway shows. Their creations have been enthusiastically embraced by A-list artists, musicians, actors, scholars, and celebrities from Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Max Ernst, and Jean Dubuffet, to David Bowie, Leonard Nimoy, Robin Williams, Susan Sarandon, Jane Fonda, Jonathan Demme, Tommy Lee Jones, John Waters, and Bjork. Films about outsiders and visionaries have received critical acclaim, such as Séraphine (2008), In the Realms of the Unreal: The Mystery of Henry Darger (2004), and Junebug (2005).² Even Homer Simpson is celebrated as an outsider artist after his failed attempt to build a backyard barbeque pit, a disaster of metal parts stuck in cement, is discovered as a masterpiece by an excited gallery owner who informs him, Outsider art couldn’t be hotter!
³ The outsider category has now extended to other expressive forms as well, including the off-beat music by self-taught individuals such as underground cult luminaries Hasil Adkins, Daniel Johnston, Lucia Pamela, the Shaggs, Wesley Willis, and Lonnie Holley, among others.⁴
With the opening of the Museum of Everything in London in October, 2009, advertised as a space for artists and creators outside modern society,
the art of self-taught outsiders achieved a new and trendy level of recognition. More than three-quarters of a million people have visited this travelling venue of creative exhibits, with its homespun, hipster vibe and inventive collaborations involving an entourage of artists, collectors, and celebrities including Cindy Sherman, David Byrne, Maurizio Cattelan, Ed Ruscha, Damien Hirst, Sir Peter Blake, Pete Townshend, Nick Cave, John Zorn, and Annette Messager.⁵ At the 55th International Art Exhibition at the Venice Biennale in 2013, the work of self-taught and outsider artists had a dominating presence, and the Museum of Everything’s official affiliated exhibition of such art was a popular attraction. The director of the Biennale, Massimiliano Gioni, integrated outsider art into the show, exhibiting it alongside that of formally trained artists. The main exhibit was entitled Il Palazzo Enciclopedico (The Encyclopedic Palace), in honor of the self-taught Italian-American artist Marino Auriti (1891–1980), the working class owner of an auto body shop in the town of Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, who in his spare time constructed a sculptural prototype for a massive imaginary museum, meant to be the tallest building in the world and contain the history of all worldly knowledge, from the wheel to the satellite. The Biennale’s outsider-art emphasis made international headlines, with many commentators considering the event one of the best art exhibits in recent years and applauding its infusion of non-mainstream and outsider art into international art-world sensibilities as an overt challenge to the commercialization of contemporary art.⁶ New York Times art critic Roberta Smith proclaimed that 2013 was the year that outsider art came in from the cold,
and that increasing recognition of the importance of outsider art could be seen in recent acquisitions of major outsider-art collections by institutions such as the American Folk Art Museum, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Milwaukee Art Museum, as well as influential exhibits of outsider art internationally (Smith, 2013).
No longer a rogue genre, outsider art commands attention more than ever before, having captured the popular imagination as a form of unharnessed and pure creativity. In turn, both the public and the market have embraced the notion of an authentic art
that provides an alternative to the elitism and commercialism of the professional contemporary art world. John Maizels, an authority on the subject and the editor of the influential Raw Vision magazine posits, It is no coincidence that the growing stature and influence of Outsider Art has happened over a period when the esteem of professional contemporary art has been held increasingly in question. The great avant-garde movements have faded into history and many feel they are faced today in our museums and galleries with an art which has become increasingly obscure and inaccessible.
Maizels further suggests, It is no wonder that an art with immediate appeal and immediate responses, that needs little critical explanation to be fully appreciated, an art that has real meaning, that stems from the roots of genuine creativity, that is forever innovative and original and truly reflects the individuality of its host of creators, cannot fail to touch an increasing and appreciative public
(1996: 228).
Adolf Wölfli, Giant City, Band-Wald-Hall, 1911. In From the Cradle to the Grave, Book 4, p. 213. Pencil and colored pencil on newsprint, 39 ¼ x 28 ¼ in. (99.7 x 71.7 cm). Courtesy Adolf Wölfli Foundation, Museum of Fine Arts, Bern, Switzerland.
Even as this widespread fascination with art created outside the structures of the art world flourishes, the definition of outsider art remains elusive. The term itself is the subject of ongoing debate, promoted by some dealers and critics as a valid category, rejected by others as a deeply offensive concept, and often embraced in resignation for lack of a better word, or conflated with other terms such as self-taught art,
visionary art,
art singulier,
autodidact art,
naïve art,
idiosyncratic art,
or contemporary folk art.
Adding to the confusion, the concept of outsider art has different and very specific associations in Europe, where such art was initially identified and studied. In the United States, the awareness of outsider art is relatively recent. In the European context, outsider art is equated with art brut, a term that refers to works created by people with no artistic training, who are somehow disconnected from conventional culture and outside the art world, such as the mentally ill, trance mediums, self-taught isolates, and societal outcasts. Their work has been celebrated as unique, idiosyncratic, and seemingly without precedent. In the States, by contrast, dealers and critics often use the term outsider art loosely, in reference to a melange of non-mainstream works created by a varied demographic: untrained artists, children, inmates, contemporary folk artists, naïve artists, artisans from so-called Third World and developing nations, and members of specific ethnic groups. As a result, definitions of outsider art are unstable and contested, and term warfare
has been waged on numerous occasions. Still, the concept of outsider art thrives as a term of convenience, a catchall signifier and marketing label for art outside the mainstream.⁷
Surveying the field of outsider art today, one encounters an astounding assortment of drawings, paintings, sculptures, embroidery, carvings, art environments, assemblages, and other artworks. This plethora of creative output is produced outside of the fine art echelons by a wide range of individuals. Some were diagnosed as mentally ill, such as the highly acclaimed Adolf Wölfli, Aloïse Corbaz, August Natterer, Martín Ramírez, and Carlo Zinelli. Others were inspired by religious experiences, dreams, or trance states, such as the Spiritualist mediums Madge Gill and Augustin Lesage, the apocalyptic visionaries Howard Finster and Sister Gertrude Morgan, or the Haitian Vodou practitioners Hector Hyppolite and Pierrot Barra. The work of self-taught southern African Americans is ubiquitous in the outsider-art world: Bill Traylor, Minnie Evans, Bessie Harvey, Thornton Dial, William Edmondson, James Son
Thomas, Sam Doyle, Royal Robertson, Purvis Young, Mose Tolliver, and Lonnie Holley are just a few of the many highly regarded artists. Individuals who have constructed entire art environments also have been included in the outsider and visionary art category: Sabato (Simon) Rodia and his Watts Towers in Los Angeles; Ferdinand Cheval’s Palais Idéal and Raymond Isidore’s La Maison Picassiette in France; Nek Chand’s Rock Garden in Chandigarh, India; Helen Martins’s Owl House in Nieu-Bethesda, South Africa; Grandma Prisbrey’s Bottle Village in Simi Valley, California; and Richard Greaves’s anarchitectural structures, hidden in the countryside of Quebec. And then there are those who defy categorization, such as James Castle, James Harold Jennings, Alexander Lobanov, Luboš Plný, Ionel Talpazan, Melvin Way, and George Widener, among many others.
Madge Gill, The Crucifixion of the Soul (detail), commenced June 1, 1934. Black and colored inks on calico, 1 ⅞ x 17 ¼ feet (56 cm x 5.25 meters). Image and dimensions courtesy London Borough of Newham Heritage and Archives.
Howard Finster, VISION OF A GREAT GULF ON PLANET HELL, 1980. Enamel on plywood with painted frame, 35 ⅜ x 18 ⅝ in. (90 x 47.2 cm). Smithsonian American Art Museum; gift of Herbert Waide Hemphill, Jr. (1988.74.5).
Sabato Rodia’s towers in Watts, California. Photograph Seymour Rosen, May 1991. Courtesy SPACES—Saving and Preserving Arts and Cultural Environments.
Ferdinand Cheval’s Palais Idéal, Hauterives, France. Photograph Emmanuel Georges. Copyright Collection Palais Idéal, Emmanuel Georges.
Unlike folk art, which is rooted in collective aesthetics and in the traditions of a particular community or subculture, outsider art is usually considered to be an expression of a uniquely personal vision that preoccupies the creator, who is often regarded as disconnected from the broader culture or community.⁸ Most of the literature about outsider artists portrays them as self-taught individuals who create things with no regard for recognition or the marketplace. As described by Michel Thévoz, author of the book Art Brut and the former curator of the Collection de l’Art Brut in Lausanne, Switzerland, outsider art consists of works produced by people who for various reasons have not been culturally indoctrinated or socially conditioned. They are all kinds of dwellers on the fringes of society. Working outside the fine art ‘system’ (schools, galleries, museums and so on), these people have produced, from the depths of their own personalities and for themselves and no one else, works of outstanding originality in concept, subject and techniques. They are works which owe nothing to tradition or fashion. . . . [These artists] make up their own techniques, often with new means and materials, and they create their works for their own use, as a kind of private theater. They choose subjects which are often enigmatic and they do not care about the good opinion of others, even keeping their work secret
(Thévoz, no date). Outsider art also has been defined by its qualities of originality and intensity, and described, often in breathless prose, as a truly inventive form of art that is potent, evocative, provocative, intensely personal, unselfconscious, expressive, enigmatic, obsessive, vital, disquieting, brutal, subtle, exotic, close-to-the-ground, challenging
(David Steel, quoted in Manley, 1989: ix).⁹
Inside one of the structures at Tressa Prisbrey’s Bottle Village in Simi Valley, California, early 1990s. Photograph Ted Degener.
Richard Greaves’ anarchitectural house construction in a forest in Quebec, 2008. Photograph Peter Jan Margry and Daniel Wojcik.
Aloïse Corbaz, Napoleon III at Cherbourg (The Star of the Paris Opera), (Napoléon III à Cherbourg [L’étoile de l’Opéra Paris]), between 1952 and 1954. Colored pencil and juice of geranium on sewn-together sheets of paper, 64 ½ x 46 in. (164 x 117 cm). Photograph Claude Bornand. Collection de l’Art Brut, Lausanne.
Heinrich Anton Müller, with machines he invented (whereabouts unknown), in the courtyard of the Münsingen Asylum, near Bern, Switzerland, c. 1914–1922, © Kunst-museum Bern, Schweizerische Gesellschaft für Psychiatrie.
The category of outsider art was not created by artists themselves, nor should one consider outsider art an artistic style or historical movement like Cubism, Dada, Surrealism, or Abstract Expressionism. Instead, it is a classification that has been defined and imposed upon individuals by collectors, art critics, and dealers. Those who have been labelled outsider artists seldom have contact with each other, and usually have little interest in defining their own work in such terms. Many so-called outsiders do not consider themselves artists at all, and they often make things for entirely personal reasons, whether in response to a traumatic event, for instance, or as an expression of a visionary experience. Such works, often created by individuals with no thought of financial gain or personal acclaim, have increasingly been introduced by others into the high-stakes realm of the professional art world, and may sell for tens of thousands, even hundreds of thousands of dollars at galleries and dealers’ fairs. Major auction houses such as Sotheby’s and Christie’s now handle high-end outsider art; in March of 2011, for example, a drawing of the Virgin Mary on crinkled brown butcher paper, made in a psychiatric hospital in the early 1950s by Martín Ramírez, was auctioned for more than $400,000, while a work created by the reclusive janitor Henry Darger sold for nearly $750,000 in December 2014, setting a record for outsider-art sales at the time.¹⁰
Connoisseurs of outsider art have their own preferences and criteria for those who should be included in the pantheon of outsider-art super-stars, but a sampling of those universally acclaimed as masters
include Aloïse Corbaz (1886–1964), a Swiss governess who was institutionalized after developing a delusional infatuation with Kaiser Wilhelm II, and who scavenged found materials and created a color palate from crushed flower petals, toothpaste, and other substances to produce radiant scroll-like images of sensuous women and their romantic suitors in royal contexts; the psychiatric patient Heinrich Anton Müller (1869–1930), who had a psychological breakdown after his invention of a grapevine-pruning machine was stolen, and while hospitalized he created abstract drawings of strangely distorted human figures and odd creatures, as well as huge mechanical perpetual motion machines that were elaborately constructed with movable parts made from discarded materials and lubricated with his own excrement and bodily secretions; and Willem van Genk (1927–2005), a Dutch man diagnosed with psychosis who created intense travel scenes, train sculptures from debris, and fetishistic raincoats that he believed had protective powers. Of equal status in outsider-art circles are the beautiful fiber sculptures by the autistic artist Judith Scott (1943–2005), who created enigmatic cocoon-like objects woven with colored yarn and scraps of cloth; the surrealistic and sexually charged caricatures and death-infused picture poems by the petty criminal and vagrant street occultist Friedrich Schröder-Sonnenstern (1892–1982); the ornately wired and energy-filled healing machines
constructed by the once itinerant hobo Emery Blagdon (1907–1986); and the work of Eugene Von Bruenchenhein (1910–1983), who built thrones and crowns of chicken bones, produced photographic erotica of his wife and muse Marie, and created more than one thousand luminous finger paintings of apocalyptic landscapes, mushroom clouds, and intergalactic cityscapes. The obsessively detailed pencil drawings of the Polish shopkeeper Edmund Monsiel (1897–1962) are equally valued; traumatized by his experiences of Nazi occupation, Monsiel hid in an attic for the duration of the war, working by candlelight to create hundreds of intense and intricate images swarming with uncanny mustached faces, staring eyes, and religious figuration that he continued to produce in secret for the last twenty years of his life. The art of Sava Sekulić (1902–1989), a Croatian of Serbian ethnicity, also emerged in response to life trauma—after a childhood of isolation and poverty, a World War I injury that left him blind in one eye, and the death of his wife and only child, he began creating an extraordinary pantheon of thousands of hybrid human-animals, bizarre figures, and folk-fantasy creatures. In the American context, Henry Darger (1882–1973) is considered the embodiment of the outsider-art phenomenon: abandoned and traumatized as a child, as an adult Darger, a quiet and reclusive janitor, lived alone in a small apartment in Chicago. There he secretly wrote a 15,145 page, single-spaced manuscript that describes the ongoing battle between the angelic and heroic Vivian Girls (little girls with male genitalia) and the brutal Glandelinians, who practice child enslavement. Darger illustrated this epic struggle, in some cases on scrolls twelve feet in width, with elaborate scenes of gruesome torture and slaughter as well as sentimental depictions of idyllic childhood bliss.
Friedrich Schröder-Sonnenstern, The Practice (Die Praxis), 1958. Colored pencil on paper, 39 ⅛ x 27 ½ in. (99.5 x 70 cm). Photograph Alistair Overbruck, Cologne, Germany. Courtesy Museum Charlotte Zander, Bönnigheim, Germany.
Emery Blagdon inside his shed with his healing machine constructions, Garfield Table, Nebraska, 1979. Photograph Sally and Richard Greenhill.
Eugene Von Bruenchenhein, Untitled (no. 931), 1962. Oil on paperboard, 17 ½ x 28 ½ in. (44.4 x 72.4 cm). © 2009 Rich Shapero. Used with permission. www.vonbruenchenhein.com
In recent years at the Outsider Art Fair in Manhattan and Paris, at the Slotin Folk Fest in Atlanta, at the Museum of Everything’s travelling shows, at the Venice Biennale, and at dozens of other galleries and venues internationally, the variety of work on display has included art by the self-taught, the socially marginalized, and the religiously inspired, as well as that by memory painters, hobos, Holocaust survivors, Vietnam War veterans, refugees, prisoners, alleged UFO abductees, people with autism, and other individuals considered to be non-traditional, untrained, undiscovered, or non-mainstream. In addition to the compelling paintings and drawings by those individuals who are established in the outsider-art canon, the objects now included in the seemingly all-encompassing outsider-art category include tree-root sculptures, wire fetish objects, enigmatic doomsday calendars, folk pornography, illustrations of flying saucer visions, handmade dolls drenched in mud and blood, robots made from coffee pots, carved skateboards, erotic whirligigs, Haitian beaded flags, painted chewing gum, peach-stone carvings, outsider collage and photography, bottle cap art, illustrations of Jesus on recycled toilet-paper tubes, miniature embroidery stitched out of sock thread, and the ink drawings of legendary tattoo artists.¹¹ This scattering of examples illustrates only a fraction of the hundreds of fascinating hand-made things now contained in the outsider-art world’s cabinet of creative curiosities. Despite attempts to identify some recurrent features of outsider art (intensity, originality, unselfconscious, idiosyncrasy, compulsiveness, visionary impulse, obsessiveness, dense ornamentation, bricolage, repeated patterns and motifs), there is little, if anything, that unifies its creators except for the ways that they are viewed by dealers and collectors as marginal, unusual, or disconnected from mainstream society, creating art in an untutored way or singular style that is outside the dominant art-world paradigm and conventional understandings of art.¹²
Edmund Monsiel, Untitled, 1961. Pencil on paper, 10 ½ x 6 ⅞ (26.5 x 17.5 cm). Courtesy of abcd collection/Bruno Decharme, Paris.
Sava Sekulić, The Man, 1970. Mixed media on cardboard, 28 x 19 ⅞ in. (71 x 50.5 cm). Photograph Alistair Overbruck, Cologne, Germany. Courtesy Museum Charlotte Zander, Bönnigheim, Germany.
Henry Darger, Untitled (Battle Scene during Lightning Storm, Naked Children with Rifles), n.d. Watercolor, pencil, and carbon tracing on pieced paper, 24 x 74 ¾ in. (61 x 190 cm). Collection American Folk Art Museum, New York; gift of Nathan and Kiyoko Lerner (1995.23.1b). Photograph Gavin Ashworth, © Kiyoko Lerner.
Ionel Talpazan, Father and Son in Space, 1992. Oil on canvas, 36 x 58 in. (91.4 x 147.3 cm). Photograph James Wojcik.
The expression outsider art
was popularized with the publication of art historian Roger Cardinal’s influential book Outsider Art in 1972, the title of which was proposed as an English equivalent for the French term art brut, a concept advanced by the modernist painter Jean Dubuffet in the 1940s and 1950s.¹³ For Dubuffet (1901–1985), art brut (raw art
) was made by people free of formal artistic training, whose production was untainted
by the culture of the academy and existed outside of or against cultural norms. Whereas the French connotation of brut as Dubuffet used it is raw,
unfiltered,
or unadulterated and pure,
for most English speakers it suggests brute
or brutal,
and the word outsider
was recommended as an alternative English equivalent. However, the term outsider art has now taken on a meaning and life of its own, often very different from the original intention of Cardinal, who followed Dubuffet’s lead. In Dubuffet’s view, art brut was an authentic form of expression that served as a critique of the pretentious and artificial nature of contemporary Western art. In the mid-1940s, he began collecting the art of psychiatric patients, spiritualist mediums, and other untrained and socially isolated individuals. In 1949, he offered the following definition of art brut: We understand by this term works produced by persons unscathed by artistic culture, where mimicry plays little or no part. These artists derive everything—subjects, choice of materials, means of transposition, rhythms, styles of writing, etc.—from their own depths, and not from the conventions of classical or fashionable art. We are witness here to the completely pure artistic operation, raw, brut, and entirely reinvented in all of its phases solely by means of the artists’ own impulses. It is thus an art which manifests an unparalleled inventiveness, unlike cultural art, with its chameleon and monkey-like aspects
(1988a [1949]: 33).
Surrealists such as André Breton, as well as other modernist artists, some of whom produced art that was influenced by the aesthetics (or anti-aesthetics) of art brut, embraced Dubuffet’s ideas. Although Dubuffet later modified his views, acknowledging that being absolutely untouched by culture was impossible, the idea of raw art
that was disconnected from society and cultural influences continues to pervade the discourse about outsider art. As art therapist David Maclagan observes, "Art brut has from the start been haunted by the image of a creativity that owes nothing to any external formation or encouragement, that seems to have emerged out of nowhere, independent of any tradition or cultural context. From Prinzhorn to Dubuffet, the assertion is repeatedly made that there is no apparent source, no obvious pedigree for them. . . . [They] appear out of the blue; instances of automatic creation that